In direct response to the continuing devastating plague of gun violence that is ravaging all parts of our Commonwealth, I will be re-introducing a bill requiring individuals to obtain a firearm eligibility license prior to purchasing a gun.  
  
According to the Johns Hopkins Center on Gun Policy and Research, states with handgun purchaser licensing laws tend to have lower firearms-related death and trafficking rates than states without such laws. When Connecticut passed a licensing law, its firearm homicide rate decreased by 28% and its firearm suicide rate decreased by 33%. (Conversely, when Missouri repealed its handgun purchaser licensing law in 2007, firearm-related homicide rates in the state swiftly increased while remaining stable in neighboring states and nationally.) And lastly, states with licensing laws saw a 56% reduction in mass shootings and 76% lower rates of guns exported to criminals.  
  
This bill would create a new firearm eligibility license under Title 18 (Crimes Code). To apply for this license, individuals would follow a similar process to the one currently used when applying for a concealed carry permit in PA: submitting a prescribed PA State Police form to the county Sheriff (of all non-Philadelphia counties) or, in Philadelphia, the Chief of Police.  
  
To qualify for a license, an applicant will need to: 1) be 18 or older, 2) live in the Commonwealth, 3) complete a firearms safety course (or show proof of completing such a course within the three years prior to application), and 4) otherwise not be prohibited by law from purchasing or possessing a firearm. Only individuals like police, members of the armed forces, and corrections officers would be exempt from these training course requirements. Prior to issuing a firearm to a buyer, the issuing body must conduct a review of the applicant’s criminal history, juvenile delinquency records, and mental health records, as well as an investigation as to whether the individual is otherwise precluded by law from owning a firearm. As a part of this review/investigation, each applicant’s fingerprints will be run through both the FBI and state databases.  

  
Under this legislation, any individual denied a license is entitled to file an appeal by submitting a challenge to the Pennsylvania State Police within 30 days from the date of the denial.  

 
The goal of this legislation is simple: to ensure that our communities are safe places for our children to grow. This legislation is a common-sense solution with a broad base of support -- in fact, the New England Journal of Medicine has reported that most American gun owners support going through law enforcement to receive a permit—and constitutional: a similar bill enacted in Maryland was upheld in federal court.  

 

This legislation was previously introduced as HB 690 in the 2023-2024 session. At that time, it was co-sponsored by the following members: Frankel, Salisbury, Madden, Hill-Evans, Schlossberg, Sanchez, Rabb, Probst, Khan, Parker, Cerrato, Otten, Hohenstein, Daley, Waxman, Kinsey, Cepeda-Freytiz, Schweyer, Galloway, Donahue, and Green. 
  
Please join me in co-sponsoring this important legislation to protect all Pennsylvanians.